Tag Archives: Bob Sutton

Andy Hargadon’s Brilliant Post On Jobs Versus Edison

Posted 20 September 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

Andy Hargadon, a Professor at the University of California at Davis, just wrote a fantastic blog post that compares Steve Jobs and Thomas Edison.  Although there are many shallow comparisons of this kind coming out in the press, none are written by anyone who spent years studying Edison as Andy has done.  Andy also worked [...]

5 Warning Signs Apple is Starting to Slip

Posted 27 August 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

I declined several media inquiries to comment on Steve Jobs and the impact his departure will have on Apple.  I did so because predicting the future of any company is always hard, but especially so for Apple where the secrecy is so severe.  For example, although Tim Cook has stepped in and out of the [...]

What Would You Do If Your Doctor Relied on a Book Like This?

Posted 20 August 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

As regular readers of this blog will know,  I am a strong advocate of evidence-based management.  Yes, there are times when sound evidence isn’t available, can’t be generated fast enough to make a pressing decision, or clashes so much that you need to go with your gut instinct.  But there are plenty of times when [...]

New Study: Helpful and Friendly Co-Workers Can Keep You Alive

Posted 10 August 2011 | By | Categories: Business Life | No Comments

Tiffany West from the World Economic Forum just alerted me to an intriguing new study that suggests having the right co-workers can help us live longer, while having the wrong ones might kill us.  The article was published by Arie Shirom and four of his colleagues and is based on a diverse sample of approximately [...]

The Progress Principle: A Masterpiece Every Manager Should Own

Posted 03 August 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

The Progress Principle was just published. A big congratulations to Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer.  I love this book, it is based on incredibly rigorous research, it provides the the best evidence ever of the power of small wins (one of my obsessions in Good Boss, Bad Boss), and it is chock full of useful [...]

A Talk On Fast Innovation, All In One Great Picture

Posted 25 July 2011 | By | Categories: Strategy | No Comments

A couple weeks ago, I did a talk on “fast innovation” at IDEO.  I gave the talk from a powerpoint deck, but at the same time, while the audience and I discussed the the talk, there was a guy named Kevin Bain who does this thing called “graphics scribing.”  On a single big piece of [...]

Horrible Bosses and Revenge: The Uncut Version

Posted 22 July 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

I had a little piece published today in the Financial Times called “Revenge Can Be Sweet for Smart Workers.”  Follow the link if you want to read the article (you need to register, but it is free).  I have been doing a lot of interviews and such lately about Good Boss, Bad Boss and The [...]

New York City Halts Teacher Bonus Program: Another Blow to Evidence-Resistant Ideology

Posted 18 July 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

The New York Times reports that the school system has abandoned their teacher bonus system because it is ineffective. I quote: A New York City program that distributed $56 million in performance bonuses to teachers and other school staff members over the last three years will be permanently discontinued, the city Department of Education said [...]

How Many Pilots Does a 737 Need? Evidence-Based Management in Action

Posted 29 June 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

I have been reading a lot about group and organizational size lately because it is a key issue for understanding the “scaling problem” that Huggy Rao and I are currently tackling.  After all, if you want to grow a large organization or network, it is crucial to understand how large “the building blocks” should be, [...]

A Rough But Intriguing Metric for School Assessing a School Principal

Posted 22 June 2011 | By | Categories: Management | No Comments

Yesterday, I did an interview for the BAM network on Good Boss, Bad Boss.  The content expert on line was Justin Snider, who teaches at Columbia and has in-depth knowledge about K-12 schools, as that was the focus of the conversation.  Justin had great questions and comments about bosses in general (see this recent post) [...]

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